During the ethereum boom, you could find plenty of gaming forums, with some sociopaths and their 10-300 gpus.. They loved pissing off the gamers for some reason, it was weird.
Even now, its possible, nvidia did something similar during the initial bitcoin gpu boom.
But the main thing they seem to be selling are the industrial gpu cores. (which was actually marketed as a viable commercial gpu for users to share I think) Mostly would be used by technical artists for things like movie fx, and games(design). Still is.
But these are the CHIPS to use if your want a real neural net. Wouldnt be surprised to find out there are countrys buying this stuff up for their own projects.
Why? Does no one remember that crazy shit back when the ps3's come out and there was a rumor that saddam was buying these things by the boatload. I always wondered if they could really be used like that.
Yeah they can, some people still using them. Cheap compared to the a100's or whatever they are called now.
During the ethereum boom, you could find plenty of gaming forums, with some sociopaths and their 10-300 gpus.. They loved pissing off the gamers for some reason, it was weird.
Even now, its possible, nvidia did something similar during the initial bitcoin gpu boom.
But the main thing they seem to be selling are the industrial gpu cores. (which was actually marketed as a viable commercial gpu for users to share I think) Mostly would be used by technical artists for things like movie fx, and games(design). Still is.
But these are the CHIPS to use if your want a real neural net. Wouldnt be surprised to find out there are countrys buying this stuff up for their own projects.
Why? Does no one remember that crazy shit back when the ps3's come out and there was a rumor that saddam was buying these things by the boatload. I always wondered if they could really be used like that.
Yeah they can, some people still using them. Cheap compared to the a100's or whatever they are called now.
https://www.theverge.com/2019/12/3/20984028/playstation-supercomputer-ps3-umass-dartmouth-astrophysics-25th-anniversary